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职业迁徙
个人简介
Tamás Korcsmáros started his research work as a high-school student in a biochemistry laboratory and for five years he worked on the experimental analysis of redox adaptation. He graduated as a molecular biologist (Eotvos Lorand University, Budapest, Hungary) and as a PhD student developed a gap-filling signalling network database, SignaLink. In Budapest, he established the NetBiol - Network Biology group, which focuses on signalling and regulatory networks. The group has been developing novel databases and web-services to meet key scientific community needs.
In March 2014, Tamás moved to Norwich and works as a Computational Biology Fellow at the Earlham Institute and Quadram Institute Bioscience (QIB). His multi-disciplinary group is currently combining computational and experimental approaches to predict, analyse and validate host-microbe interactions in the gut, especially in relation to the regulation of autophagy by microbes and upon disease conditions such as inflammatory bowel disease and cancer. Tamás also took major part in the organisation of eight international conferences (each with more than 1000 participants), he is the co-founder of two network analysis companies and coordinated 3 innovation grant programs. Since 2001, Tamás has been participating as a volunteer in Hungarian and international talent support organizations. He is currently the Chairman of the Research Student Foundation supporting 5000 high-school research students.
Publication summary
51 peer-reviewed articles (main author in 28; 5 highly cited, 2 three-star F1000 recommendations), 8 book chapters, 3 patent applications, 4 editorships, 2 invited talks (1 plenary), 9 selected talks (1 plenary at ECCO’19 for 8,000 IBD specialist)). Citations from Google Scholar as of Sept. 2019 = 4886 (without a major community paper: 2361 citations); h-index=24; i10-index=34
Selected Grants
BBSRC: Institute Strategic Programme grant for Genomics for food security (Earlham Institute). (2017-2022); Co-PI (total value £4.5M); and Leader of the “Regulatory interactions and Complex Phenotypes” workpage (£1.7M)
Fellowship at the Earlham Institute and the Quadram Institute. ~£640,000 (2014-2019) (PI)
BBSRC iCASE Studentship; How our other genome the microbiome – keeps us healthy: understanding a long friendship using a combination of computational and experimental approaches; £151,212; PI; (2017-2021)
Norwich Research Park Translation Fund. iSNP innovation project (2016) £182,000 (Co-PI)
NRP Translation Fund. Omix Navigator innovation project (2015-2016) £ 93,000 (PI)
EU and the European Regional Fund (EAOP-1.1.3-12-2012-0005) (2012-2013) Innovation grant for bioinformatics resource development equivalent to ~ £200,000 (PI)
Hungarian Research and Technology Office (5LET-08-2-2009-0041) (2009-2010) Innovation grant for bioinformatics resource development equivalent to ~ £400,000 (PI)
Selected Teaching Experiences
2012- EMBL-EBI Course on Networks and Pathways Bioinformatics for Biologists
2014- EMBL EBI Course on Integrative Omics (invited lecturer) (Cambridge, UK)
2016- NRP DTP course on Computational and Systems Biology (co-coordinator, lecturer)
Selected Organizational Experiences
2006- CEO of PrediNet Ltd.
2005-2011 organizer of 7 international conferences each with more than 1000 participants
2012- Chairman of the Research Student Foundation supporting 5000 young scientists
2014, 2017. Main organizer of the Interdisciplinary Signaling Workshop (http://signalingworkshop.org)
Selected awards and honors:
Prima Junior Award – for outstanding Hungarian young scientists
In March 2014, Tamás moved to Norwich and works as a Computational Biology Fellow at the Earlham Institute and Quadram Institute Bioscience (QIB). His multi-disciplinary group is currently combining computational and experimental approaches to predict, analyse and validate host-microbe interactions in the gut, especially in relation to the regulation of autophagy by microbes and upon disease conditions such as inflammatory bowel disease and cancer. Tamás also took major part in the organisation of eight international conferences (each with more than 1000 participants), he is the co-founder of two network analysis companies and coordinated 3 innovation grant programs. Since 2001, Tamás has been participating as a volunteer in Hungarian and international talent support organizations. He is currently the Chairman of the Research Student Foundation supporting 5000 high-school research students.
Publication summary
51 peer-reviewed articles (main author in 28; 5 highly cited, 2 three-star F1000 recommendations), 8 book chapters, 3 patent applications, 4 editorships, 2 invited talks (1 plenary), 9 selected talks (1 plenary at ECCO’19 for 8,000 IBD specialist)). Citations from Google Scholar as of Sept. 2019 = 4886 (without a major community paper: 2361 citations); h-index=24; i10-index=34
Selected Grants
BBSRC: Institute Strategic Programme grant for Genomics for food security (Earlham Institute). (2017-2022); Co-PI (total value £4.5M); and Leader of the “Regulatory interactions and Complex Phenotypes” workpage (£1.7M)
Fellowship at the Earlham Institute and the Quadram Institute. ~£640,000 (2014-2019) (PI)
BBSRC iCASE Studentship; How our other genome the microbiome – keeps us healthy: understanding a long friendship using a combination of computational and experimental approaches; £151,212; PI; (2017-2021)
Norwich Research Park Translation Fund. iSNP innovation project (2016) £182,000 (Co-PI)
NRP Translation Fund. Omix Navigator innovation project (2015-2016) £ 93,000 (PI)
EU and the European Regional Fund (EAOP-1.1.3-12-2012-0005) (2012-2013) Innovation grant for bioinformatics resource development equivalent to ~ £200,000 (PI)
Hungarian Research and Technology Office (5LET-08-2-2009-0041) (2009-2010) Innovation grant for bioinformatics resource development equivalent to ~ £400,000 (PI)
Selected Teaching Experiences
2012- EMBL-EBI Course on Networks and Pathways Bioinformatics for Biologists
2014- EMBL EBI Course on Integrative Omics (invited lecturer) (Cambridge, UK)
2016- NRP DTP course on Computational and Systems Biology (co-coordinator, lecturer)
Selected Organizational Experiences
2006- CEO of PrediNet Ltd.
2005-2011 organizer of 7 international conferences each with more than 1000 participants
2012- Chairman of the Research Student Foundation supporting 5000 young scientists
2014, 2017. Main organizer of the Interdisciplinary Signaling Workshop (http://signalingworkshop.org)
Selected awards and honors:
Prima Junior Award – for outstanding Hungarian young scientists
研究兴趣
论文共 188 篇作者统计合作学者相似作者
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Maria New,Tim Van Acker,Jun-Ichi Sakamaki,Ming Jiang, Rebecca E. Saunders,Jaclyn Long,Victoria M.-Y. Wang,Axel Behrens, Joana Cerveira,Padhmanand Sudhakar,Tamas Korcsmaros, Harold B.J. Jefferies,
crossref(2023)
NATURE COMMUNICATIONSno. 1 (2023)
International journal of molecular sciencesno. 8 (2023): 7671-7671
Nature Biotechnologyno. 8 (2023): 1056-1059
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Maria New,Tim Van Acker,Jun-Ichi Sakamaki,Ming Jiang, Rebecca E. Saunders,Jaclyn Long,Victoria M.-Y. Wang,Axel Behrens, Joana Cerveira,Padhmanand Sudhakar,Tamas Korcsmaros, Harold B.J. Jefferies,
crossref(2023)
Maria New,Tim Van Acker,Jun-Ichi Sakamaki,Ming Jiang, Rebecca E. Saunders,Jaclyn Long,Victoria M.-Y. Wang,Axel Behrens, Joana Cerveira,Padhmanand Sudhakar,Tamas Korcsmaros, Harold B.J. Jefferies,
crossref(2023)
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